Lawyer – Alan Gross wants out of Cuba dead or alive

U.S. government subcontractor Alan P. Gross is “not doing well” after 4
1/2 years in a Cuban prison and has vowed that he will “return to the
United States before his 66th birthday, dead or alive,” his lawyer said
Wednesday.

“He told me yesterday emphatically that May 2, which marks his 65th
birthday, will be the last birthday that he marks in Cuba, one way or
the other,” attorney Scott Gilbert said in a telephone interview from
Havana with MSNBC’s Andrea Mitchell.

Asked what Gross meant, the Washington attorney said, “Alan means that
he does not intend to endure another year of this solitary confinement
and that he will return to the United States before his 66th birthday,
dead or alive.”

Gross’s family later issued a statement quoting the prisoner as saying
that his vow that May 2 will be his last in Cuba “means what it means.
It’s not a threat, it’s a statement of hope, a statement of
determination and a statement of impatience.”

Gross is serving a 15-year prison sentence for violating Cuba’s national
security by delivering satellite phones to island Jews so they could
bypass government controls on the Internet. Havana alleges the
equipment, paid for by the U.S. Agency for International Development, is
part of a USAID effort to undermine the communist government.

Gilbert said Gross “is not doing well” because he has lost 110 pounds —
the last 10 in a hunger strike earlier this month — and spends 23 hours
a day in his pajamas in a small room with two other inmates.

He is allowed out for one hour a day to exercise in a courtyard and his
food is “limited, and mediocre,” the attorney said. Gross is being held
in a Havana military hospital.

Gilbert said he also met for nearly two hours Wednesday with Cuban
Foreign Minister Bruno Rodriguez, who repeated that his government “is
interested in meeting with officials from the United States at the
highest levels of both governments to discuss the release of Alan Gross
with no preconditions.”

But “we are not aware, and certainly the Cubans are not aware, of any
ongoing discussions with the United States concerning Alan Gross,”
Gilbert said during the interview with Mitchell.

“Our message, really, is to the president of the United States. And it
is President Obama, please engage on this issue,” Gilberto said. “Sit
down with the Cuban government. Try to reach a resolution. Do what you
can do to bring Alan Gross back to his country. Make serving your
government in a foreign country mean something.”

Gross spent nine days on a hunger strike to protest against both the
Cuban and U.S. governments for his continued imprisonment. His family
said the hunger strike was triggered by an Associated Press report that
USAID financed a Twitter-like platform for Cuba called ZunZuneo shortly
after his arrest, risking complicating his case.

The family statement Wednesday said he has lost partial vision in his
right eye and suffers from pain in both hips and in his back. The lights
on his room are kept on 24 hours a day, it added.

The Cuban government has repeatedly offered to free Gross in exchange
for three Cuban spies serving lengthy sentences in U.S. prisons since
1998. Two other members of the “Wasp Network” arrested in South Florida
completed their sentences and returned to Havana.

Obama administration officials have repeatedly rejected any such swap.
One of the Cuban spies is serving a life sentence for his role in Cuba’s
killing of four South Miami pilots from the Brothers to the Rescue over
the Florida Straits in 1996.

By continuing to use the site, you agree to the use of cookies. more information

The cookie settings on this website are set to "allow cookies" to give you the best browsing experience possible. If you continue to use this website without changing your cookie settings or you click "Accept" below then you are consenting to this.